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In this study, the author explores how Conrad, T.S. Eliot, Woolf,
Joyce, Faulkner, Hemingway, Huxley and others responded to the
immediate challenges of their time, to the implications of Freudian
psychology, molecular theory, relativist theory, and the general
weakening of religious faith. Assuming that artists and writers, in
coping with those problems, would develop techniques in many ways
comparable, even where there was no direct contact, he positions
modernist literature within the context of contemporary painting,
architecture and sculpture, thereby providing some interesting
insights into the nature of the literary works themselves.
On the grounds that Greene deliberately misled biographers and
interviewers, Roston focuses upon the texts themselves and their
manipulation of reader response, highlighting the innovative
strategies that Greene developed to cope with the mid-century
invalidation of the traditional hero and the potential hostility of
readers to his advocacy of Catholicism. The result is a stimulating
new reading of the major novels.
The scientific achievements of the modern world failed to impress the leading writers of this century, leaving them instead profoundly disturbed by a sense of lost values and of the insignificance of the individual in a universe seemingly indifferent to human concerns. Murray Roston explores the strategies adopted by such mid-century authors as Greene, Salinger, Osborne, Baldwin, and others in their attempt to cope with the spiritual emptiness--of the anti-hero and literary existentialism--and offer in the course of the investigation new insights into their work.
The scientific achievements of the modern world failed to impress
the leading writers of this century, leaving them instead
profoundly disturbed by a sense of lost values and of the
insignificance of the individual in a universe seemingly
indifferent to human concerns. In The Search for Selfhood in Modern
Literature Roston explores the strategies adopted by such
mid-century authors as Greene, Salinger, Osborne, Baldwin and
others in their attempt to cope with the spiritual vacuity -
strategies including the emergence of the anti-hero and of literary
existentialism - and offer in the course of the investigation
fascinatingly new insights into their work.
In this stimulating study, the author explores how Conrad,
T.S.Eliot, Woolf, Joyce, Faulkner, Hemingway, Huxley and others
responded to the immediate challenges of their time, to the
implications of Freudian psychology, molecular theory, relativist
theory, and the general weakening of religious faith. Assuming that
artists and writers, in coping with those problems, would develop
techniques in many ways comparable, even where there was no direct
contact, he positions Modernist literature within the context of
contemporary painting, architecture and sculpture, thereby
providing some fascinating insights into the nature of the literary
works themselves.
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